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Nov 26, 2012
11/12
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states and ultimately smuggle their families into the united states. and that is what is happening. [applause] >> thank you very much. i think this is a good opportunity now to invite our guests to ask questions of our writers. if you go to the microphone, please, we cannot hear you and i'll help us respond effectively. >> if we read in the press, with the constant mention of these very large cartels in mexico that are smuggling drugs. but how far down the distribution chain to the cartels actually extend? today hired the guys out on the street of the day simply come into chicago and sell it to a middleman anyway going from the major wholesalers down, how far to the mexican cartels extend into the u.s.? >> when you take a quick shot at this. that's an important question because i want to say one thing about the cartels. our security for our country doesn't start or end at the u.s. border. right now one of our centers, the drug interdiction center is mentioned in the cartel president from all the cartels in mexico in about 1286 cities throughout the uni
states and ultimately smuggle their families into the united states. and that is what is happening. [applause] >> thank you very much. i think this is a good opportunity now to invite our guests to ask questions of our writers. if you go to the microphone, please, we cannot hear you and i'll help us respond effectively. >> if we read in the press, with the constant mention of these very large cartels in mexico that are smuggling drugs. but how far down the distribution chain to the...
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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million illegal aliens in the united states. we have not been doing what is correct. i will lay the ball where should be. it has not been because we haven't had agents or personnel who wanted to do the right thing and do it right. our political leaders have always neglected this issue and we can increase our security and put offenses along the border. it won't fall that because as long as people need a place to work and there are employers in the united states who are willing to hire them and the government or political leaders who don't provide appropriate resources to enforce immigration law in the interior of the united states we will continue having people coming to this country looking for a better way of life and also if we have a need for workers in the united states our political leaders should have given the opportunity for workers to come into the country and leave rather than have to sneak into the united states and smuggle their families and to the united states and that happened. [applause] >> this is a good opportu
million illegal aliens in the united states. we have not been doing what is correct. i will lay the ball where should be. it has not been because we haven't had agents or personnel who wanted to do the right thing and do it right. our political leaders have always neglected this issue and we can increase our security and put offenses along the border. it won't fall that because as long as people need a place to work and there are employers in the united states who are willing to hire them and...
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Sep 9, 2012
09/12
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and of course that marine base is the largest training facility for the united states because there were so the last generation had been in the desert, that has been the training facility of choice. so a lot of young men and women have gone through twentynine palms to train. so defined by the military in so many ways. it's such a fraught place. the tense marigold desert and meets a different light ratepayer because the highway north is the marine base. the highway south is joshua tree national park. [inaudible] >> i read something maybe two years ago was this article in l.a. grohl from the east coast originally, from new york. and if as hot as new cool and was telling everybody to go out, saddle up and buy stuff in coachella and india, go out their. it's like kind of palm springs was this thing and now i want to know how you see extreme poverty versus this incredible opulence and well fed kind of new money. like i just wondered what she think. what happens when filming? do they ever meet up? >> the short answer is they do when they don't. they had a new desert bohemia. they were writing
and of course that marine base is the largest training facility for the united states because there were so the last generation had been in the desert, that has been the training facility of choice. so a lot of young men and women have gone through twentynine palms to train. so defined by the military in so many ways. it's such a fraught place. the tense marigold desert and meets a different light ratepayer because the highway north is the marine base. the highway south is joshua tree national...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 26, 2012
01/12
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SFGTV2
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states or come from long lines of families that come from the united states. we know we see this difference along the spectrum. let me highlight a couple of points that i think make a big difference. realize we have a cohort population between 8 million and 11.5 million of individuals in the united states who are undocumented, who some say are illegal or not lawfully present. they are in a group that is cut off in part and formality from the main economy. this is unwise because immigrants, both skilled and unskilled, in this case, that 8 million to 11 million, provide the innovative engine in the economy in these relatively dark times. i'll address the issue of unemployment. but in these difficult economic times, they provide a certain component to the economy which allows us to innovate and grow at a rate that we otherwise would not. in short, immigrants of all types unaverage are net contributors to the economy, help the actual pie grow bigger, provide more of a pie to split among us all and in turn try to goose innovation in a couple of unanticipated ways.
states or come from long lines of families that come from the united states. we know we see this difference along the spectrum. let me highlight a couple of points that i think make a big difference. realize we have a cohort population between 8 million and 11.5 million of individuals in the united states who are undocumented, who some say are illegal or not lawfully present. they are in a group that is cut off in part and formality from the main economy. this is unwise because immigrants, both...
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Jul 3, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 103
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that joining the law of the sea is truly in the best interest of the united states. the u.s. relies on over 60% of all the energy we consume. recent projections by our own department of energy in the obama administration shows that 30 years from now, 57% of all the energy we consume in the united states will continue to be oil and natural gas. other projections show that the demand for world global energy led by oil and energy 20 to 30 years. energy is a very serious issue particularly to our global economy. companies spend billions of dollars annually looking for and producing oil and natural gas around the world to give you some insight from 2009 to 2011, the industry spent over $700 billion just in the united states drilling and exploring for additional opportunities. just last week at the lee sale conducted in the gulf of mexico, the u.s. oil and gas industry paid $1.7 billion in bonus bids to the federal government to secure rights to develop those resources in the gulf of mexico. preliminary studies estimate that the u.s. extended continental shelf as a result of the la
that joining the law of the sea is truly in the best interest of the united states. the u.s. relies on over 60% of all the energy we consume. recent projections by our own department of energy in the obama administration shows that 30 years from now, 57% of all the energy we consume in the united states will continue to be oil and natural gas. other projections show that the demand for world global energy led by oil and energy 20 to 30 years. energy is a very serious issue particularly to our...
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154
Dec 22, 2012
12/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 154
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he wanted to see the state of sonora in the united states. he had expensive designs with the united states should take which were more than he told nicholas. he told crist to come home and he refused to come home. tryst along with scott, decided it was the most important thing he could do and afterwards said himself he wanted to make a tree that was not exacting to mexico. he wanted to save the mexican people from a continuous civil war and dismemberment of the country so he said i am not going to come home and made a treaty despite the fact that he wrote to his wife i will probably never work in washington again. my career is over and his career was over. polk was so angry that he withheld tryst's pay when he returned to the united states and tryst, his family became incredibly poverty-stricken and wasn't until after the civil war when ulysses grant was president that tryst got another position at the end of his life and given a sort of not very demanding position running a post office in virginia but until that point tryst was broke and his
he wanted to see the state of sonora in the united states. he had expensive designs with the united states should take which were more than he told nicholas. he told crist to come home and he refused to come home. tryst along with scott, decided it was the most important thing he could do and afterwards said himself he wanted to make a tree that was not exacting to mexico. he wanted to save the mexican people from a continuous civil war and dismemberment of the country so he said i am not going...
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Jun 26, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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so under current law, the united states will need a new disposal site even if yucca mountain goes forward. we believe the approach set forth here provides the best strategy for assuring continued progress regardless of the fate of yucca mountain. >> the voting starts at 10:30, we're about five minutes into the votes. i'd like you to complete your testimony. >> so continuing with the disposal as a key element of consent-based siting, disposal facility before any new disposal site is selected, a new safety standard should be developed so the commission has recommended that the environmental protection agency and the nuclear regulatory commission which this committee has jurisdiction over should begin working together to define an appropriate process for developing a generic disposal facility safety standard and associated implementing regulations. the fifth recommendation relates to prompt efforts to develop one or more consolidated storage facilities, capacity would allow the federal government to begin the orderly transfer of spent fuel from reactor sites to safe and secure centralized fa
so under current law, the united states will need a new disposal site even if yucca mountain goes forward. we believe the approach set forth here provides the best strategy for assuring continued progress regardless of the fate of yucca mountain. >> the voting starts at 10:30, we're about five minutes into the votes. i'd like you to complete your testimony. >> so continuing with the disposal as a key element of consent-based siting, disposal facility before any new disposal site is...
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Jul 9, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 114
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the united states has traveled nearly 25 years down the current path only to come to a point where we're continuing to rely on the same approach seems destined to bring further controversy, litigation, and protracted delay. what we've found is that our nation's fail wrure to come to grips with the nuclear waste issue has already proved damaging and costly. it will be even more damaging and more costly the longer it continues. damaging due prospects for maintaining a potentially important energy supply option for the future. damaging to state federal relations and public confidence in the federal government's competence, and damaging to america's standing in the world as a source of nuclear expertise and as a leader on global issues of nuclear safety, nonproliferation, and national security. the national interest demands that our nuclear waste program be fixed. complacency with a failed nuclear waste management system is not an option. with a 65,000 metric ton inventory of spent nuclear fuel spread across the country and growing at over 2,000 metric tons a year, the status quo cannot be a
the united states has traveled nearly 25 years down the current path only to come to a point where we're continuing to rely on the same approach seems destined to bring further controversy, litigation, and protracted delay. what we've found is that our nation's fail wrure to come to grips with the nuclear waste issue has already proved damaging and costly. it will be even more damaging and more costly the longer it continues. damaging due prospects for maintaining a potentially important energy...
126
126
Apr 22, 2012
04/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 126
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states because that is the magnet that draws people into the united states. over the years like i just mentioned earlier in the program when we are talking about going from two million to fifteen million people in the ten year period there's something wrong and that policy is not working. we need to be strong at the border and in the interior of the united states and enforcement of immigration law and make sure that employers have a need for a temporary work force that the number of people allowed to come and work for a short period of time is there. that hasn't been there and i couldn't agree with you more that we have been very inconsistent on the immigration issue. >> how did you decide on the name "the shadow catcher"? >> one of the things about when we talk about the population of the united states that are undocumented we talk about people being in the shadows. that is where "the shadow catcher" comes from. >> host: do you have more stories to tell? >> guest: we are in the final stages of a second book that we hope to have on the market next year. i wor
states because that is the magnet that draws people into the united states. over the years like i just mentioned earlier in the program when we are talking about going from two million to fifteen million people in the ten year period there's something wrong and that policy is not working. we need to be strong at the border and in the interior of the united states and enforcement of immigration law and make sure that employers have a need for a temporary work force that the number of people...
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149
May 1, 2012
05/12
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eye 149
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it was a second worst decline of any american major city in the united states. immigration policy does not deserve all or maybe even most of the blame for that decline in price, but one major reason why it was so great in phoenix is the state drove out 11 hundred,000 people with sb 10ds 70 and employer sanctions law. 100,000 unauthorized immigrants in mar i cope pa county would have bought a few houses or rented them and slowed down the housing price collapse. but they couldn't because they weren't there. 20% of workers in manufacturing are immigrants. manufacturing was hurt by the recession. having the workforce diminished by these restrictive laws added to the loss and in creed the magnitude. leisure, hospitality service, wholesale trade, numerous other industries have an immigrant workforce larger than the foreign-born population and have all suffered more than other industries in the state. arizona's unemployment rate, unemployment rate has been at or above the national average since mid-2008. not long after the employer sanctions law went in effect. sb1070
it was a second worst decline of any american major city in the united states. immigration policy does not deserve all or maybe even most of the blame for that decline in price, but one major reason why it was so great in phoenix is the state drove out 11 hundred,000 people with sb 10ds 70 and employer sanctions law. 100,000 unauthorized immigrants in mar i cope pa county would have bought a few houses or rented them and slowed down the housing price collapse. but they couldn't because they...
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176
Apr 21, 2012
04/12
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eye 176
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and settled in the united states, at united states children and citizen wife. as a whole we want to address this issue. >> host: palm beach, florida. >> caller: thank you. very hard work. i want to comment on the integration of the u.s. army with the mexican army and heading towards north american union and something that might be dangerous for our health and safety laws friday while enforcement perspective. >> host: do you see a lack of sovereignty? >> guest: that won't happen. very simple, mexico is a sovereign nation. they are proud to be a sovereign nation. we are sovereign nation in the united states. we all need to cooperate as neighboring countries for the security. not just of our region but the security of the entire world. we work closely together. i want to say i am proud of the service, work very much on our
and settled in the united states, at united states children and citizen wife. as a whole we want to address this issue. >> host: palm beach, florida. >> caller: thank you. very hard work. i want to comment on the integration of the u.s. army with the mexican army and heading towards north american union and something that might be dangerous for our health and safety laws friday while enforcement perspective. >> host: do you see a lack of sovereignty? >> guest: that won't...
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the united states how. would it green card my mom. we process all the paid legal paperwork or ins and everything all right but i never became a us citizen no the whole problem but would have become of us and then i would have never been i never thought i was going to go through this sort of thought you know all my life in l.a. what's that like santa monica and so we're going for a torn apart. wherever i can never go back to my plans or to work here for like four or five months ahead gather enough money to pay for somebody help me get a brother i mean on this route right but it's all about. there it is. the majesty of las vegas. this is for. you to get anything on this. but the owner clearly something serious going on. but i live here with your whining about the blood bath the more you can go to keep my taxes the. joint selves. you know he's going to get well at this point. he's pissed me off but it's not really it's everything to like he wants to hear your only job is to make people come here and. i love it. i would never. seem to get
the united states how. would it green card my mom. we process all the paid legal paperwork or ins and everything all right but i never became a us citizen no the whole problem but would have become of us and then i would have never been i never thought i was going to go through this sort of thought you know all my life in l.a. what's that like santa monica and so we're going for a torn apart. wherever i can never go back to my plans or to work here for like four or five months ahead gather...
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145
Sep 15, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 145
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and of course that green bay's is the largest training facility for the marines in the united states and because our wars of the last generation have been in the desert, that is the training is a good choice. so a lot of young men and women have gone through 29 homes to train. so what is defined by the military in so many ways. it is such a fraught place for the 10 spec oracle desert in the supply desert meet in a fault line right there in because the highway north is the marine base. the highway south is joshua tree national park. [inaudible] >> i read something a few years ago, like maybe three years ago there was an article in outlay. it says hot is the new cool canoeist telling everybody to go out and saddle up and buy stuff in coachella and india and go live out there. it's like kind of palm springs with this being and i want to know how you see extreme poverty and dysfunction verses like this incredible opulence and while some kind of new money. like i just wondered what you think. like what happens -- do they ever meet up? >> the short answer is they do and they don't. i know
and of course that green bay's is the largest training facility for the marines in the united states and because our wars of the last generation have been in the desert, that is the training is a good choice. so a lot of young men and women have gone through 29 homes to train. so what is defined by the military in so many ways. it is such a fraught place for the 10 spec oracle desert in the supply desert meet in a fault line right there in because the highway north is the marine base. the...
127
127
Jul 12, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 127
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first, with so many players in the international nuclear technology and policy arena, the united states will increasingly have to lead by engagement and by example. second, the united states cannot exercise effective leadership on issues related to the back end of the nuclear fuel cycle so long as our own program is in complete disarray. effective domestic policies are needed to support america's international agenda. in conclusion, the problem of nuclear waste may be unique in the sense that there is a wide agreement about the outlines of a solution. simply put, we know what we have to do. we know we have to do it and we even know how to do it. we believe the conditions for progress are arguably more promising than they have been in some time, but we will only know -- we will only know if we start which is what we urge the administration and congress to do without further delay. thank you for having us here today and we look forward to your questions. thank you very much. >> i want to thank you both for that joint testimony. we're going to recess here for a brief period of time. we sho
first, with so many players in the international nuclear technology and policy arena, the united states will increasingly have to lead by engagement and by example. second, the united states cannot exercise effective leadership on issues related to the back end of the nuclear fuel cycle so long as our own program is in complete disarray. effective domestic policies are needed to support america's international agenda. in conclusion, the problem of nuclear waste may be unique in the sense that...
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101
Apr 23, 2012
04/12
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LINKTV
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narrator: in europe and the united states, policies have been put in place to reduce air pollution. the clean air act of 1970, which set limits on concentrations of certain pollutants, along with subsequent programs, has significantly improved air quality. kolb: since 1970, we've had fairly strict laws which have helped stop the increase in bad air-pollution episodes and, in fact, in most cities have decreased them. but in cities with rapid growth and with challenging climates -- climates that can lead to a lot of chemistry in the air and a lot of secondary pollution formation, there are certainly still big challenges left. narrator: developing innovative ways to measure primary and secondary pollutants is a necessary first step in creating effective strategies for protecting human health. but measuring the local air pollution from cars and factories is just one piece of the puzzle. atmospheric circulation carries pollutant streams far beyond the metropolitan areas where they are created, causing regional and even global effects. and so the pollutions that are created in the large m
narrator: in europe and the united states, policies have been put in place to reduce air pollution. the clean air act of 1970, which set limits on concentrations of certain pollutants, along with subsequent programs, has significantly improved air quality. kolb: since 1970, we've had fairly strict laws which have helped stop the increase in bad air-pollution episodes and, in fact, in most cities have decreased them. but in cities with rapid growth and with challenging climates -- climates that...
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Nov 22, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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who immigrate to the united states illegally to find work. this is about half an hour. >> what is -- [inaudible] >> the way u grew up knowing it was it was the reference to the united states, but to me because i grew up in the hometown surrounded by mountains, i didn't know where the united states was to me it was the other side of the mountain. during the time my parents were gone, working here in the u.s. i will look at the mountain something i parents were over there on the other side of the mountains. that was what it meant to me. >> where did you grow up? originally where were u born. >> in mexico. southern mexico in the little city that nobody has heard of. why mention ak acapulco everybody knows that. it was three hours away from there. >> when did your parents come to the united states? how would were you? >> my father came here in 1977 when i was two years old. and he sent for my mother a few years later. my mother came here in 1980 when was four and a half. >> when did you come to the united states? >> i came to the united states in
who immigrate to the united states illegally to find work. this is about half an hour. >> what is -- [inaudible] >> the way u grew up knowing it was it was the reference to the united states, but to me because i grew up in the hometown surrounded by mountains, i didn't know where the united states was to me it was the other side of the mountain. during the time my parents were gone, working here in the u.s. i will look at the mountain something i parents were over there on the other...
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the united states. would a green card my mom. crosses all the paid legal paperwork and if everything is all right but i never became a us citizen no the whole problem would have become of us and then i would have never been here i never thought i was going to go through this sort of thought you know all my life in l.a. what's that like santa monica police and so you're going for torn apart. indefinitely wherever i can never go back and i think my plans are to work here for like five months ahead gather enough money to pay for somebody help me get a brother i mean on this route right but it's all about. there it is. the majesty of las vegas. this is for. you to get anything on this. but the owner clearly something serious going on. but i leave it with your whining about the blood bath. the more you gamble the cheaper my tax the. joint selves. you know he's going to get with his phone. call but it's not really it's every going to like the forms. your only job is the me company and. i thought. i would never. seem to get some money a
the united states. would a green card my mom. crosses all the paid legal paperwork and if everything is all right but i never became a us citizen no the whole problem would have become of us and then i would have never been here i never thought i was going to go through this sort of thought you know all my life in l.a. what's that like santa monica police and so you're going for torn apart. indefinitely wherever i can never go back and i think my plans are to work here for like five months...
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129
Dec 17, 2012
12/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 129
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he wanted to see the rest of the united states and he had expensive design on what the united states should take from mexico, much more that he told nicholas to negotiate more. so he told him to come home. what ended up happening is that trist refused came that he refused to come home. as trist said, he wanted to make a treaty that was not exactly to mexico. so he made the treaty while lupe adolfo, despite the fact that he wrote his wife that he will probably never work in washington again. and polk was so angry that he withheld the pay of trist, and his family became an incredibly poverty-stricken family. it wasn't until after the civil war that trist got another position. it was near the end of his life and he was given a not very demanding position running a post office in virginia. but up until that point, he was broke and his family over terribly because of it. now, let's just kind of wrap this up and tell you what i think the antiwar protests, the context is. the top quote that i have is a quote from polk from january of 1848. this is what he said to his cabinet. he said at thi
he wanted to see the rest of the united states and he had expensive design on what the united states should take from mexico, much more that he told nicholas to negotiate more. so he told him to come home. what ended up happening is that trist refused came that he refused to come home. as trist said, he wanted to make a treaty that was not exactly to mexico. so he made the treaty while lupe adolfo, despite the fact that he wrote his wife that he will probably never work in washington again. and...
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united states this time they told me if i come back they want to give me a better time. so that's why i was like i don't want to spend more time retail i'm going back to michael just credit for the for this now we would know what it's like you know. homo. concerned you. know i run thirty years yeah i've been there all my life since i was in the case and right now i got my kids over there and i'm separated by this is so they're not. going to see him for whatever i know it. might get better i guess is the bill there if not with the without the. i'm really happy leave actually you know what i mean i'm tired i forget how and why she wears you out and how. kind of sad to leave but i've done fifteen months on the border i've done another five months worth of work on the outside. and i guess i've kept myself out to. a pretty happy for what i did and. if anybody was a moderating force on that line it would've been me. you may have to a while but i started to notice up there was that. there was more ideologues of the actual patriots. because so many people will just have one sing
united states this time they told me if i come back they want to give me a better time. so that's why i was like i don't want to spend more time retail i'm going back to michael just credit for the for this now we would know what it's like you know. homo. concerned you. know i run thirty years yeah i've been there all my life since i was in the case and right now i got my kids over there and i'm separated by this is so they're not. going to see him for whatever i know it. might get better i...
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99
Nov 18, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 99
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i called my friend from costa rei can that lived in the united states for many years. i met through the solidarity networking. politics in the 1980s and i said, [inaudible] she happened to be live nghts village in california. that the particular time. there's a whole set of circumstance that lead her to, you know, she's from the tropics, central america, you know, how did she wind up in the desert. everybody has a story in the desert how they got there. she said, [inaudible] we'll take care of you and give you a place to live shortly there after. i arrive and one of the first things i saw when i rented my shack in the sand next to a sign that said next services 100 miles, the town of 129 presiden. i felt myself to go further out. they are at the edge of beautiful national park. you know that? right. if you haven't been there. u2 album. the joshua tree. you know what it looks like. crazy arms going this way and that. well, i wanted to go further out. there was something that was driving me further out in to the nothing. the big empty, as they say. and also because the f
i called my friend from costa rei can that lived in the united states for many years. i met through the solidarity networking. politics in the 1980s and i said, [inaudible] she happened to be live nghts village in california. that the particular time. there's a whole set of circumstance that lead her to, you know, she's from the tropics, central america, you know, how did she wind up in the desert. everybody has a story in the desert how they got there. she said, [inaudible] we'll take care of...
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107
Apr 10, 2012
04/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 107
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as i've mentioned before, natural gas is an important resource which is abundant in the united states, but we must make sure that the ways we extract it do not risk the safety of public water supplies. this budget continues epa's ongoing congressionally directed hydraulic fracturing study. we're taking steps to ensure it's peer reviewed and based on strong and scientifically defensible data. building on these ongoing efforts, this budget requests $14 million in total to work collaboratively with the united states geological survey. the department of energy and other partners to assess questions regarding hydraulic fracturing. strong science means finding the answers to tough questions, and epa's request does that. we are making investments to support standards for clean energy and efficiency in this budget. specifically, the budget supports epa's efforts to introduce cleaner vehicles and fuels and to expand the use of home-grown renewable fuels. this includes funding for epa's federal vehicles and fuel standards and certification program that supports certification and compliance test
as i've mentioned before, natural gas is an important resource which is abundant in the united states, but we must make sure that the ways we extract it do not risk the safety of public water supplies. this budget continues epa's ongoing congressionally directed hydraulic fracturing study. we're taking steps to ensure it's peer reviewed and based on strong and scientifically defensible data. building on these ongoing efforts, this budget requests $14 million in total to work collaboratively...
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Oct 22, 2012
10/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 105
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yet he runs the whole counterterrorism operation of the united states. i met them. i could write one hell of a spy novel. [laughter] one them asked me not to visit another said i could come. and the first time i came was to speak in colombia this is the funny but not funny moment. i was met at the airport by a motorcade with an armored white stretch limousine like having a finger in the sky. [laughter] he is here. [laughter] i said lt. bob cohmad this is a lot. would now be better to drive me through the back streets of queens. he looked at me. and said no sir. it would not be better. [laughter] i said who else would you do this war? he said it is what we do for yes, sir. arafat. [laughter] >> said the may i was the head of the plo i said just because i was curious if you were protecting the president what more would you do? he said if you with the president of the united states, we would close down the side roads and have been in the buildings and helicopters. we did not do that because of a look to conspicuous. [laughter] >> very good. good americans. [laughter] o
yet he runs the whole counterterrorism operation of the united states. i met them. i could write one hell of a spy novel. [laughter] one them asked me not to visit another said i could come. and the first time i came was to speak in colombia this is the funny but not funny moment. i was met at the airport by a motorcade with an armored white stretch limousine like having a finger in the sky. [laughter] he is here. [laughter] i said lt. bob cohmad this is a lot. would now be better to drive me...
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Mar 3, 2012
03/12
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people who rely on these things should know that if i'm president of the united states they will not only be protected but be preserves. i will make sure those programs are permanent and there for the seniors of today and the seniors of tomorrow. thank you. yes, ma'am. >> -- you have a name tag on. is that darlene? >> yes, it is. >> hi. >> there's one area of the economy that would help stimulate many, many jobs in many areas. and it needs some help now. and that is the housing market. what can you do to help that? it helps so many jobs in so many areas that will help so many people. >> there are two things, let me mention, and let me tell you what they are. number one, we need banks, particularly community banks that have been in many cases those that have originated these loans in other cases they service them today. we need those banks to be willing to renegotiate with people who are under water in their homes. if you have someone who has an income and can meet payments that are a little lower than the current mortgage, work with them, renegotiate. don't put the home into foreclos
people who rely on these things should know that if i'm president of the united states they will not only be protected but be preserves. i will make sure those programs are permanent and there for the seniors of today and the seniors of tomorrow. thank you. yes, ma'am. >> -- you have a name tag on. is that darlene? >> yes, it is. >> hi. >> there's one area of the economy that would help stimulate many, many jobs in many areas. and it needs some help now. and that is the...
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Jan 30, 2012
01/12
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the national cancel is the largest civil rights advocacy organization in the united states. thanks for joining us. want to get your thought -- it's been a whirlwind two weeks in florida. talk about your sense of how the immigration issue has come out in the florida primary. we've had a lot of discussion this morning on the "washington journal." >> sure. i think it's been fascinating really, to see the candidates for the first time talk about the issue with the knowledge that part of the electorate in the state in which they're running is really a diverse state with a large and significant and important block of latino voters and hispanic voters. so for us it's been very revealing to see how many of these candidates, including romney and gingrich, are initiating their outreach for the first time in ernest to latino voters. i think what we've seen is it is knew. i don't think we've heard candidate romney really talk like he has spoken in the last few weeks about immigration. in fact, immigration was something that he spoke very little about in iowa and south carolina and in ne
the national cancel is the largest civil rights advocacy organization in the united states. thanks for joining us. want to get your thought -- it's been a whirlwind two weeks in florida. talk about your sense of how the immigration issue has come out in the florida primary. we've had a lot of discussion this morning on the "washington journal." >> sure. i think it's been fascinating really, to see the candidates for the first time talk about the issue with the knowledge that...
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the united states. would have green card my mom. crosses all the pit legal paperwork or ins and everything's all right but i never became a u.s. citizen no the whole problem but i would have become a little known i would have never been i never thought i was going to go through this sort of thought you know all my life in l.a. what's that like santa monica and so you're going for a torn apart yeah. definitely wherever i can never go back to my plans or to work here for like four or five months and they gather enough money to pay for somebody help me get a brother i mean on the street right but it's all about. there it is. the majesty of las vegas. this is for. you to get anything on this. but the only clearly see here is come on. back libya where you're pointing out that . the more you gamble the cheap it might tax the. joint cells. you know he's going to get with his phone. call but it's not really it's every going to like the forms. are all means yasi is that me and people come in and. out of there and i would never. submit to get
the united states. would have green card my mom. crosses all the pit legal paperwork or ins and everything's all right but i never became a u.s. citizen no the whole problem but i would have become a little known i would have never been i never thought i was going to go through this sort of thought you know all my life in l.a. what's that like santa monica and so you're going for a torn apart yeah. definitely wherever i can never go back to my plans or to work here for like four or five months...
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Dec 16, 2012
12/12
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CSPAN2
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he wanted the state of sonora in the united states. he had expansive designs on what the united states should take from mexico for a much more he told tryst he had negotiated for. he told trista come home to what happened was refused to come home. traced, along with scott decided that vacated peace treaty with mexico is the most important thing he could do. he wanted to make a treaty that was not expecting to mexico. he wanted to save the mexican people from a continuation of the war and dismemberment of the country. he said i'm not going to come home and he made a treaty of quantum that they had although despite the fact he wrote to his wife, i will probably never work in washington again. my career was over and affect his career was over. polk was so angry that he withheld pay interest, his family became incredibly poverty-stricken. it wasn't until after the civil war when ulysses grant was president petraeus got another position and was given this sort of not very demanding as they should run in post office in virginia. up until tha
he wanted the state of sonora in the united states. he had expansive designs on what the united states should take from mexico for a much more he told tryst he had negotiated for. he told trista come home to what happened was refused to come home. traced, along with scott decided that vacated peace treaty with mexico is the most important thing he could do. he wanted to make a treaty that was not expecting to mexico. he wanted to save the mexican people from a continuation of the war and...
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Aug 25, 2012
08/12
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WUSA
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states quite far north in the united states? >> yes, yes, we should be legalizing drugs, and taxing them. >> are you talking cocaine? >> that would be -- i'm talking heroin, marijuana, whatever the drugstore is that comes out of mexico. and because columbia, we've had success there, basically, columbia, the drug war lass been contained, now mexico is the alternative and they really are the hot spot when it comes to that. >> let me turn this to a head and go you, mort. mexico's issue number one. >> if he is sworn in as president of mexico, will inherit the brutal drug war that has claimed over 50,000 dead. mexican voter, their biggest issue is mexico's ongoing violence that saw an 11% increase in deaths this year alone. nieto's answer, quote-unquote, strategy adjustment. meaning instead of focusing solely on big cartel bosses, expand the current policy. mr. nieto's new plan still involves the military, but adding to it a 40,000 member force controlled by civilian authorities. aka, the dejon-marie. they will fight the violence wit
states quite far north in the united states? >> yes, yes, we should be legalizing drugs, and taxing them. >> are you talking cocaine? >> that would be -- i'm talking heroin, marijuana, whatever the drugstore is that comes out of mexico. and because columbia, we've had success there, basically, columbia, the drug war lass been contained, now mexico is the alternative and they really are the hot spot when it comes to that. >> let me turn this to a head and go you, mort....
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Jun 21, 2012
06/12
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it is no coincidence that the attorney general of the united states is the person responsible for making sure that voter suppression does not happen in our country, that issues that relate to the civil liberties of the american people are upheld. these very same people are holding in contempt and are part of a nationwide scheme to suppress the vote. they are closely aligned with those who are suffocating the system with unlimited, special interest, secret money and they are poisoning the debate. they are poisoning the debate with that money. and so what does the average citizen say? they throw up their hands and say -- both the houses and that is a victory for the special interest. our founders had in mind a democracy where the government of the many -- the vote of the many and the voice of the many determined our government. these folks want a pollutocracy, where instead of the voice of the many, the check books of the very, very few determine the outcome of the elections. again, a pollutocracy and instead what you see is a diversion. diversionary tactics and let's not talk about the tr
it is no coincidence that the attorney general of the united states is the person responsible for making sure that voter suppression does not happen in our country, that issues that relate to the civil liberties of the american people are upheld. these very same people are holding in contempt and are part of a nationwide scheme to suppress the vote. they are closely aligned with those who are suffocating the system with unlimited, special interest, secret money and they are poisoning the...
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Jun 20, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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it is about the department of justice and justice in the united states of america. have the guts, i hope we have the guts and the perseverance to get to the bottom of this. we have nearly 2,000 weapons purposely -- purposely given to drug cartels. we have hundreds of dead people in mexico. we have a dead united states border patrol agent and we have a government that's withholding information so that we can not only get to the bottom of it, but that we can fix it and make sure it never, ever happens again, and when we're issued a letter and ten months later they have to pull it back and say that's not true, something is fundamentally wrong. it's also not about 140,000 documents that the department of justice knowingly says that they have and we have less than 8,000 of them. it's not about those numbers, it's the fact that we don't have all of them, whatever that number is. and when you have somebody like the former acting director of the atf say under oath, quote, it was very frustrating to all of us and it appears thoroughly to us that the department is really tryi
it is about the department of justice and justice in the united states of america. have the guts, i hope we have the guts and the perseverance to get to the bottom of this. we have nearly 2,000 weapons purposely -- purposely given to drug cartels. we have hundreds of dead people in mexico. we have a dead united states border patrol agent and we have a government that's withholding information so that we can not only get to the bottom of it, but that we can fix it and make sure it never, ever...
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May 1, 2012
05/12
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in 2008, the illegal population in the united states peaked. between 2008 and 2009 it actually fell from 12 million to 11 million people. since 2009, it's held steady at 11 -- probably trending downward. on a net basis, illegal mig sgrags now zero or negative. the border is in fact under control. the number of apprehensions -- 22,000 officers and they're having a harder time finding anybody to arrest. apprehensions at the mexico-u.s. border are now lower than at any time since 1972. have more and more officers chasing fewer and fewer people. part of this is the collapse in labor demand. particularly in residential home construction. after the great recession of 2008. but it's also been because the united states is quietly, without anybody really noticing, dramatically expanded temporary legal migration. given the choice, of course, migrants would much rather come here with legal documents. and in 2010, there were 517,000 -- 537,000 entries of mexicans into the united states with temporary work visas. the largest number of in history. so one of
in 2008, the illegal population in the united states peaked. between 2008 and 2009 it actually fell from 12 million to 11 million people. since 2009, it's held steady at 11 -- probably trending downward. on a net basis, illegal mig sgrags now zero or negative. the border is in fact under control. the number of apprehensions -- 22,000 officers and they're having a harder time finding anybody to arrest. apprehensions at the mexico-u.s. border are now lower than at any time since 1972. have more...
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147
Jul 12, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 147
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all across the united states. utility commissioners care because the utilities pass the cost of these fees to their customers through their electric bill. notwithstanding our position on the mrgs handling of the yucca mountain issue, we were closely involved in the work of the blue rib bob commission. we were impressed with the members. the talented staff and the sincere interest in public input. we have asked to maintain and preserve access to the commission website. as for the religions we welcome them all we have the following points. first, reform the nuclear waste fund or reform of the fund is essential for most of the recommendations to occur. next, regardless of yucca mountain we need another 'poz repository. the lessons suggest that consent based sitting approach may get better results but require patience. we find the report vague as to quantity, duration and cost. we're not sure what the effect will be on the fee if the nuclear waste fund is to be used to pay for storage. we agree with the concept and be
all across the united states. utility commissioners care because the utilities pass the cost of these fees to their customers through their electric bill. notwithstanding our position on the mrgs handling of the yucca mountain issue, we were closely involved in the work of the blue rib bob commission. we were impressed with the members. the talented staff and the sincere interest in public input. we have asked to maintain and preserve access to the commission website. as for the religions we...
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May 2, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN3
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in other words, not only is immigration not bankrupting the united states, it is the only thing that can save us. thank you. >>> and now to some solutions. todd. >> thanks, david. this is, really, i think, one of the -- the -- the key discussions that we need to be having on this immigration issue, and that is, what are the solutions? what are other solutions? as we've heard this morning, if you look at the number of state-level immigration laws and even immigration laws that have been passed at the city, county or state levels over the last several years, as you've heard this morning, the economic outcomes in a lot of the social outcomes are not very good. so we can either continue down a path of following some ideas that we know don't work, or we can begin starting to explore some ones that have a better shot of working. the three presenters that you're going to hear now come at this from quite different perspectives. we have county attorney bill montgomery. who is the county attorney for maricopa county, arizona which is sort of, i guess a lot of people call ground zero of the imm
in other words, not only is immigration not bankrupting the united states, it is the only thing that can save us. thank you. >>> and now to some solutions. todd. >> thanks, david. this is, really, i think, one of the -- the -- the key discussions that we need to be having on this immigration issue, and that is, what are the solutions? what are other solutions? as we've heard this morning, if you look at the number of state-level immigration laws and even immigration laws that...
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Sep 9, 2012
09/12
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states because our wars have been in the desert that has been the facility of choice. a lot of hit men and women have gone through their to train. it is defined by the military. the phantasmagoric cold desert has the fault line right there. the highway north is the marine base. a highway south is joshua tree national park. >> read two years ago there was an article that said hot is the new school to saddle up and go live out there. i want to know how you see extreme poverty and dysfunction amid the new money and wealth do they ever meet up? >> they do land they don't. the "los angeles times" had a spread called in new desert bohemia. they're writing about me. we had no idea. all we knew is that it was cheap we were creative types fleeing the justification of the city and the boom years start to pick up and capital looks for places to go. from sample of ciskei the need to tell you but i mentioned to with real-estate speculation, the effect is due to store and obscure native populations it is representational and physical. we were low rent but after we arrived in the rea
states because our wars have been in the desert that has been the facility of choice. a lot of hit men and women have gone through their to train. it is defined by the military. the phantasmagoric cold desert has the fault line right there. the highway north is the marine base. a highway south is joshua tree national park. >> read two years ago there was an article that said hot is the new school to saddle up and go live out there. i want to know how you see extreme poverty and...
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Nov 29, 2012
11/12
by
LINKTV
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states. ofte those hopes are arrested manyre at the border. man: ahora lista pont la mano en frente... narrator: the u.s. i.n.s., or immigration and naturalization service, records each apprehension on standard forms, including one entry with hidden lue: it washe migrants' home towns inexico. that's whabringseograpr chard jones to the i.n. it washe migrants' home towns with a novel reseah plan. jones knows that ecomic conditions vary greatly om region to region in mexico. he suspects that some places drive ou- or "push"-- many more migrants to the u.s. than others. hehis investigation beginses drily90s- or "push"-- aris home inanoniotes. hehis ijones lieves beginses many secrets are stored in i.n.s. files like tse. can theyeveal where most migrants come from? can the answers help both countries keep more people at home? cjones sampless every tenth record, writing down the area of origin within mexico. back in hioffice at the university of texas, he enters the values into a map of mexico. jone
states. ofte those hopes are arrested manyre at the border. man: ahora lista pont la mano en frente... narrator: the u.s. i.n.s., or immigration and naturalization service, records each apprehension on standard forms, including one entry with hidden lue: it washe migrants' home towns inexico. that's whabringseograpr chard jones to the i.n. it washe migrants' home towns with a novel reseah plan. jones knows that ecomic conditions vary greatly om region to region in mexico. he suspects that some...